That eyeball tattoo is scary. The young lady felt the need to do it and now it's cost her some sight. Not really surprised about that, it's too dangerous to mess with your sight like that and the tattoo artist says she did it correctly.

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Coconut water, quinoa and chia have three things in common: they're popular, they're expensive and they're often marketed as ultra-healthy "superfoods."

Marketplace recently reviewed the labels of nearly 100 so-called superfood products as part of an investigation to see whether the trend is actually about better health or simply marketing hype.

Friday night's episode (8 p.m. CBC, 8:30 p.m. in Newfoundland) reveals how any product can be labelled as a superfood in Canada without actually having to prove it has superior health benefits — an accountability gap that experts warn could lead consumers to overpay for foods that under-deliver.

Marketplace also decided to pit three of the most popular superfood staples head-to-head against three cheaper Canadian alternatives to see which ones provide the best nutritional bang for your buck. Here are the results of the food faceoff.

A Marketplace investigation discovered a variety of recalled baby products for sale, raising serious questions about the effectiveness of the system meant to protect the public from products with dangerous flaws.

Over a period of two weeks, Marketplace purchased three different products in store and online after they'd been recalled by the manufacturer days, weeks and even months earlier.

The items included a rattle and stackable rings found to be potential choking hazards, and building blocks with magnets that could prove deadly if swallowed.

"I think that's a real problem," said Nancy Cowles, executive director of Kids in Danger, a non-profit based out of Chicago that was founded in 1998 after a toddler was killed in a crib collapse. The child's parents were unaware the crib had been recalled five years earlier.

Health Canada won't ban or recall wire barbecue brushes even though the agency has received more than two dozen reports of injuries caused by swallowing bristles that came loose and ended up in food. Physicians recommended a ban, but Health Canada said that industry may want to "take steps to reduce the risk of bristles detaching

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